Seibold (noble family)

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Coat of arms of the Seybold von Horkheim

Seibold (also Seybold ) is the name of a Swabian noble family .

In 1622 the Württemberg Lieutenant Georg Seybold acquired Horkheim Castle and the town of Horkheim . Both were given to tenants. Georg's son was Wilhelm Ludwig von Seybold.

From 1634 to 1673, the Seibold were counted as a knightly family in the knightly canton of Kocher of the Swabian knight circle because of Horkheim .

The son of Wilhelm Ludwig Johann von Seibold was the last representative of his family. In 1686, the knightly canton of Kocher asked the Palatinate Lehnhof to convert the Seybolds' fiefs into a kunkelle fief . That was complied with. As a result, the property of the daughter Johann von Seybolds fell into the possession of her husband Hans Ulrich von Remchingen .

coat of arms

The coat of arms is squared in gold and red, fields 1 and 4 on a silver three-hill an inward-facing blue griffin, in the claw two diagonally crossed lowered arrows, 2 and 3 three silver tips reaching to the upper edge. The griffin grows on the helmet with the blue and gold blankets on the right and red and silver on the left .

swell

  • State Archives Ludwigsburg: inventory B 125 Bü (not evaluated)

literature

  • Gerhard Köbler : Historical lexicon of the German countries. The German territories from the Middle Ages to the present. 7th, completely revised edition. CH Beck, Munich 2007, ISBN 978-3-406-54986-1 , pp. 658-659.
  • Thomas Schulz: The canton Kocher of the Swabian imperial knighthood 1542-1805. Origin, history, constitution and membership structure of a corporate aristocratic association in the system of the old empire. Esslingen City Archives, Esslingen 1986 ( Esslinger Studien . Volume 7).
  • Description of the Oberamt Heilbronn . Lindemann, Stuttgart 1865, pp. 386-387.
  • GA Seyler in J. Siebmacher's large and general book of arms, VI. Volume, 2nd Division; Dead aristocracy from Württemberg; Nuremberg: Bauer & Raspe, 1911, p. 181, plate 97

Individual evidence

  1. http://www.landesarchiv-bw.de/plink/?f=1-773055
  2. ^ GA Seyler in "J. Siebmacher's large and general book of arms ”, VI. Volume, 2nd Department, Dead Wuerttemberg Aristocracy; Nürnberg, Bauer & Raspe, 1911, p. 181